Explanation: At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the three countries competed for hegemony. When Liu Bei was embarrassed, he borrowed Jingzhou from Soochow to live and recuperate. After a slight improvement, Dongwu repeatedly asked for Jingzhou. Of course, Liu Bei would not give up his only foothold, so he repeatedly delayed for various reasons. Zhou Yu, the governor of Wu Dong, was very angry and wanted to take Jingzhou back with tricks. Zhuge Liang saw through the calculation and arranged for Zhao Yun to accompany him.
Liu Bei came to Dongwu with a large number of troops and bride price, met Zhou Yu's father-in-law Gong Qiao first, and then explained the purpose of his visit through Gong Qiao's mouth, and handed the information to Sun Quan's mother Wu Guotai's ear.
When Wu Guotai met Liu Bei in Kanluoji, he was very satisfied with him. He really married Sun Shangxiang to Liu Bei, but Sun Quan's plan failed, and so did his efforts to keep Liu Bei in luxury. Finally, Sun Quan had no right to return to Jingzhou, and his sister was taken away. Therefore, this time, it is not only an affair that makes a fool of himself, but also a "losing his wife and losing his soldiers."
Extended data story background:
After Battle of Red Cliffs, the seven counties of Jingzhou contested by military strategists were divided among Liu Bei, Cao Cao and Sun Quan. Cao Cao occupied Nanyang County, the largest county in the north of Jingzhou, and Jiangxia County, north of the Yangtze River. Sun Quan got Jiangxia County and most southern counties in the south of the Yangtze River, while Liu Bei got southern counties in the south of the Yangtze River and four counties in the south of Jingzhou (Changsha, Lingling, Guiyang and Wuling).
After the war in Nanjun, Zhou Yu divided the south bank of Nanjun into Liu Bei and Liu Bei, and stationed troops for public security. He asked Sun Quan to be the commander-in-chief of Jingzhou on the grounds that the scarcity of land was not conducive to development. Only Lu Su strongly advocated borrowing land. The reason is that, firstly, although Cao Cao was defeated by Chibi, his strength was still very strong, and Wu Dong could not fight alone. In addition, Liu Bei enjoys a high reputation in Jingzhou. Borrowing Liu Bei's land is conducive to creating a new school, manipulating the enemy and reducing the pressure on Cao.
Sun Quan agreed to this suggestion, so Liu Bei had a complete south county, resisted Cao Cao in the north, and Sun Quan in the east, and gained Yizhou (now Sichuan), and established the foundation industry of Han Shu. Later, Sun Quan wanted to go back to Jingzhou, but Liu Bei refused, and the two sides had differences. Cao Cao came to Hanzhong again at this time, and Liu Bei was afraid of losing Shu. Because the situation was stronger than others, in order to avoid fighting on two fronts, he had to choose to compromise and cede Changsha and Guiyang counties to Sun Quan for a truce.
Relevant personnel:
1, Liu Bei, whose name is Xuande, was born in Zhuoxian County (now Zhuozhou City, Hebei Province), a quiet county in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. After Liu Sheng, the king of Zhongshan in the Western Han Dynasty, he was the founding emperor and politician of Shu Han in the Three Kingdoms period. Historians usually call it the late master. Participate in the suppression of the yellow turban insurrectionary uprising and crusade against Dong Zhuo. Due to limited strength, he repeatedly failed, so he attached himself to several governors.
Later, after unremitting efforts, Battle of Red Cliffs successively won Jingzhou and Yizhou, and established the Shu-Han regime. Later, because Guan Yu was killed, Liu Bei ignored the advice of his ministers and insisted on going to war with Wu. The result was defeated by Yiling, and finally Zhangwu died in Baidicheng in 223. At the age of 63, posthumous title Zhaolie was buried in Huiling.
2, Sun Quan, the word Zhong Mou. Fuchun County, Wu Jun (now Fuyang District, Hangzhou, Zhejiang). The founder of Sun Wu in the Three Kingdoms period (reigned from 229 to 252). In his later years, Sun Quan was capricious on the issue of heirs, which led to the clique's factional strife and unstable situation in North Korea. In the first year of Taiyuan (252), he died at the age of 71. He was in office for 24 years. The great emperor of posthumous title, whose temple name was Mao, was buried in Jiangling.
3. According to legend, Mrs. Sun's name is Fuchun (now Fuyang, Zhejiang). She is the sister of Sun Quan, a general who won the war in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, and the wife of Liu Bei, a general left. In order to consolidate the alliance between Sun and Liu, Mrs. Sun married Liu Bei for three years and later returned to Wu. After that, her deeds were not known. There is no birth record in historical materials.